Showing posts with label Passion week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Passion week. Show all posts

Maundy Thursday

Today is Maudy Thursday. It is the day when Christ was arrested, put on trial and nailed on th cross. Let us take time to reflect the love He has for us.


History behind Maudy Thursday


There are a variety of events that are clustered on this last day before Jesus was arrested that are commemorated in various ways in services of worship. These include the last meal together, which was probably a Passover meal, the institution of Eucharist or Communion, the betrayal by Judas (because of the exchange with Jesus at the meal), and Jesus praying in Gethsemane while the disciples fell asleep. Most liturgies, however, focus on the meal and communion as a way to commemorate this day.


During the last few days, Jesus and His disciples had steadily journeyed from Galilee toward Jerusalem. On the sunlight hillsides of Galilee, Jesus was popular, the crowds were friendly and the future was bright. Even his entry into Jerusalem had been marked by a joyous welcome. But in Jerusalem there was a growing darkness as the crowds began to draw back from the man who spoke of commitment and servanthood. There was an ominous tone in the murmuring of the Sadducees and Pharisees who were threatened by the new future Jesus proclaimed.


Even as Jesus and his disciples came together to share this meal, they already stood in the shadow of the cross. It was later that night, after the meal, as Jesus and His disciples were praying in the Garden of Gethsemane, that Jesus was arrested and taken to the house of Caiaphas the High Priest. On Friday He would die.


There is some difference in the chronology of these events between the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) and John’s account (see Synoptic Problem). In the Synoptics, this last meal was a Passover meal, observing the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt when death "passed over" the Hebrew homes as the tenth plague fell upon the Egyptians. Yet, in John’s account the Passover would not be celebrated until the next day. And while the Synoptics recount the institution of Communion during this final meal, John instead tells us about Jesus’ washing the disciples’ feet as a sign of servanthood.

In any case, this Thursday of Holy Week is remembered as the time Jesus ate a final meal together with the men who had followed him for so long. We do not have to solve these historical questions to remember and celebrate in worship what Jesus did and taught and modeled for us here, what God was doing in Jesus the Christ. And the questions should not shift our attention from the real focus of the story: the death and resurrection of Jesus.

Traditionally in the Christian Church, this day is known as Maundy Thursday. The term Maundy comes from the Latin word mandatum (from which we get our English word mandate), from a verb that means "to give," "to entrust," or "to order." The term is usually translated "commandment," from John's account of this Thursday night. According to the Fourth Gospel, as Jesus and the Disciples were eating their final meal together before Jesus’ arrest, he washed the disciples' feet to illustrate humility and the spirit of servanthood. After they had finished the meal, as they walked into the night toward Gethsemane, Jesus taught his disciples a "new" commandment that was not really new (John 13:34-35):

A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another; even as I have loved you, you also ought to love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.

The colors for Maundy Thursday are usually the colors of Lent, royal purple or red violet. Some traditions, however, use red for Maundy Thursday, the color of the church, in order to identify with the community of disciples that followed Jesus. Along the same line, some use this day to honor the apostles who were commissioned by Jesus to proclaim the Gospel throughout the world.

The sharing of the Eucharist, or sacrament of thanksgiving, on Maundy Thursday is the means by which most Christians observe this day. There is a great variety in exactly how the service is conducted, however. In some churches, it is traditional for the pastor or priest to wash the feet of members of the congregation as part of the service. Increasingly, churches are observing some form of the Passover Seder as a setting for the Eucharist of Maundy Thursday (see Introduction to a Christian Seder and Haggadah for a Christian Seder). Some churches simply have a "pot-luck" dinner together concluded with a short time of singing and communion.

In some church traditions all of the altar coverings and decorations are removed after the Eucharist is served on Maundy Thursday. Since the altar in these traditions symbolize the Christ, the "stripping of the altar" symbolizes the abandonment of Jesus by his disciples and the stripping of Jesus by the soldiers prior to his crucifixion. This, like the darkness often incorporated into a Good Friday service, represents the humiliation of Jesus and the consequences of sin as a preparation for the celebration of new life and hope that is to come on Resurrection Day. Some churches only leave the altar bare until the Good Friday Service, when the normal coverings are replaced with black.

However it is celebrated, the Eucharist of Maundy Thursday is especially tied to the theme of remembering. As Jesus and his disciples followed the instructions in the Torah to remember God’s acts of deliverance in their history as they shared the Passover meal together, so Jesus calls us to remember the new act of deliverance in our history that unfolds on these last days of Holy week

( Taken from http://www.cresourcei.org/cyholyweek.html)

你是我永遠的救主

A video for the song "你是我永遠的救主". Let us take time to pounder on the great love our Lord Jesus Christ has for us.




Holy Week

Monday

6th April 2009

Click here to access devotion materials

For archives of devotional materials,

click here

Reflections on this Holy Week

Dear fellow brothers and sisters in Christ,

As we entered this Holy week, let us find time and reflect on the many events that happen during this week about 2000 years ago. Today, 2000 years ago, Our Lord Jesus Christ entered Jerusalem with many people welcoming Him. But, in less than 5 days, the people changed their reactions towards Him. He was tortured and He was crucified on the cross while He was a perfect Man. He washed away our sins with His blood. Let us take some time to reflect on the great Love He has done for us.

This week, we'll be introducing to you the different events that happened on this passion week from Palm Sunday till Easter Sunday. Devotion materials is avaliable for all to reflect and pounder about. Take time to read up these devotion materials and we hope it will benefit all.

Hope that all will start to share on this week, what you've learnt and how you've experience God!

May the Lord bless you abundently as we learnt and walk thru this passion week together, reflecting on what our Lord has done for us!

God bless!
GUM Media Team


History behind Palm Sunday

Holy Week begins with the sixth Sunday in Lent. This Sunday observes the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem that was marked by the crowds who were in Jerusalem for Passover waving palm branches and proclaiming him as the messianic king. The Gospels tell us that Jesus rode into the city on a donkey, enacting the prophecy of Zechariah 9:9, and in so doing emphasized the humility that was to characterize the Kingdom he proclaimed. The irony of his acceptance as the new Davidic King (Mark 11:10) by the crowds who would only five days later cry for his execution should be a sobering reminder of the human tendency to want God on our own terms.

Traditionally, worshippers enact the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem by the waving of palm branches and singing songs of celebration. Sometimes this is accompanied by a processional into the church. In many churches, children are an integral part of this service since they enjoy processions and activity as a part of worship. This provides a good opportunity to involve them in the worship life of the community of Faith. In many more liturgical churches, children are encouraged to craft palm leaves that were used for the Sunday processional into crosses to help make the connection between the celebration of Palm Sunday and the impending events of Holy Week.

This Sunday is also known as Passion Sunday to commemorate the beginning of Holy Week and Jesus’ final agonizing journey to the cross. The English word passion comes from a Latin word that means "to suffer," the same word from which we derive the English word patient.
In most Protestant traditions, the liturgical color for The Season of Lent is purple, and that color is used until Easter Sunday. In Catholic tradition (and some others), the colors are changed to Red for Palm Sunday. Red is the color of the church, used for Pentecost as well as remembering the martyrs of the church. Since it symbolizes shed blood, it is also used on Palm Sunday to symbolize the death of Jesus. While most Protestants celebrate the Sunday before Easter as Palm Sunday, in Catholic and other church traditions it is also celebrated as Passion Sunday anticipating the impending death of Jesus. In some Church traditions (Anglican), the church colors are changed to red for the fifth Sunday in Lent, with the last two Sundays in Lent observed as Passiontide.

Increasingly, many churches are incorporating an emphasis on the Passion of Jesus into services on Palm Sunday as a way to balance the celebration of Easter Sunday. Rather than having the two Sundays both focus on triumph, Passion Sunday is presented as a time to reflect on the suffering and death of Jesus in a Sunday service of worship. This provides an opportunity for people who do not or cannot attend a Good Friday Service to experience the contrast of Jesus’ death and the Resurrection, rather than celebrating the Resurrection in isolation from Jesus’ suffering. However, since Sunday services are always celebrations of the Resurrection of Jesus during the entire year, even an emphasis on the Passion of Jesus on this Sunday should not be mournful or end on a negative note, as do most Good Friday Services (which is the reason Eucharist or Communion is not normally celebrated on Good Friday).

( extracted from http://www.cresourcei.org/cyholyweek.html)

Passion Week- Thursday Night Service

Tomorrow ( Thursday) night service

Date: 20 March 2008
Time: 8pm
Venue: Main sanctuary ( GPC)

Do attend the service in remembrance of Jesus Christ who died on the cross for us

There will be holy communion during the service

Passion week- 19 Mar




Passion Week
Wednesday
19 March 2008

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Passion Week - 18 Mar





Passion Week
Tuesday 18 March 08

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here

Passion Week- 17 Mar





Holy Week
Monday
17 March 2008

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here

Passion Week - Sat






Life From Death

Saturday
15 March 2008

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*note: updates will be done at 12am daily. Time is according to States. Do bookmark the website in case the blog is not being updated.

Passion Week - ( Friday)



Friday 14 March 08

Life From Death

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Passion Week



From today till the end Friday next week, it is known as the "Passion Week" in the Christian Calender. The GUM Media will provide devotional materials for all to meditate and reflect on God's Word and His great Love for us. We hope that through these materials, youths of GUM will not only remember Good Friday or Easter, but remember the month long before Easter. Let's remember how Christ have died on the cross for us.

Passion Week Event @ GPC
Stations of the cross - A Joint Event by the GUM -Youths and Youth Adults Fellowship

On Sat, 22nd Mar, a joint event by theophilus YAF and the Youth Fellowship will allow the youths to experience "Stations Of the Cross" the first ever in Glory Church. All youths and young adults are strongly encouraged to attend. Details will be released through the various fellowships.